"We're Hunting Bin Laden." IE, Letting him chill.
So apparently the US forces hunting Bin Laden are
really under the control of the Pakistani army. And they're certainly in no rush
to capture him. (from the
NYT.)
Good
thing that most of the ISI (and other Pakistani military elements) are on
al-Qaeda's side, as they fought together in the 80's against the Soviets and
most likely got most of al-Qaeda out of the area, smuggling them across the
border, probably into Waziristan, when the US started military ops in
Afghanistan because they were really good friends with one
another.
ARRRGHHHHH. How the hell is this
possible? Bush kept kvetching about how Kerry would take away the US (and its
military's) sovereignty.....seems to me that that's exactly what's going on on
his watch. Fing ridiculous! RIDICULOUS!!!! Where is the freaking
OUTRAGE?
If we want to win this freaking
WOT, LET'S GET SERIOUS.
I mean, for
chrissakes!
Here's the
text of that NYT
article. Fing
ridiculous.
December
13,
2004
INTELLIGENCE
A Hostile Land Foils
the Quest for bin Laden
By JAMES RISEN and DAVID ROHDE
Hunting for Osama bin
Laden, the C.I.A. established a series of small, covert bases in the rugged
mountain frontier of northwest Pakistan in late 2003. Mr. bin Laden, the
terrorist leader, was being sheltered there by local tribesmen and foreign
militants, the agency had concluded, and controlled a group of handpicked
operatives dedicated to attacking the United
States.
But since the bases
opened, the C.I.A. officers stationed there have been strictly supervised by
Pakistani officials, who have limited their ability to operate and have escorted
them wherever they travel in the Pakistani border region. As a result, it has
been virtually impossible for the Americans to gather intelligence effectively,
say several officials familiar with the operation who would only speak
anonymously.
More than three
years after the Sept. 11 attacks on the Pentagon and New York transformed Osama
bin Laden into the most wanted man in the world, the search for him remains
stalled, frustrated by the remote topography of his likely Pakistani sanctuary,
stymied by a Qaeda network that remains well financed and disciplined,
sidetracked by the distractions of the Iraq war, and, perhaps most
significantly, limited by deep suspicion of the United States among
Pakistanis.
Prodded by the
United States, Pakistan began an offensive along its northwest border this
spring to flush out forces of Al Qaeda that had escaped from Afghanistan and to
help find Mr. bin Laden. But after suffering heavy casualties and causing
civilian deaths that stirred opposition, the Pakistani Army declared victory two
weeks ago and announced that Mr. Bin Laden was not in Pakistan. Many American
intelligence officials are confident that he is, however - and that he is as
dangerous as ever.
The war in
Afghanistan inflicted severe damage on Al Qaeda, forcing it to adapt to survive,
intelligence specialists agree. Today, they say it functions largely as a loose
network of local franchises linked by a militant Islamist ideology. But Mr. bin
Laden remains much more than just an iconic figurehead of Islamic militancy,
most American intelligence officials now say. From a presumed hiding place on
the Pakistani side of the Afghan-Pakistan border, he controls an elite terrorist
cell devoted to attacking in the United States, the officials say they suspect.
They contend that he personally oversees the group of Qaeda operatives, which he
hopes to use for another "spectacular" event, like the Sept. 11 hijacking
plot.
American
counterterrorism analysts say this special Qaeda unit is probably dispersed,
though they do not know where. This "external planning group" can communicate
with regional affiliates around the world to work with them when needed, one
senior intelligence official said. "There is a strong desire by bin Laden to
attack the continental United States, and he wants to use the external planning
node to do it," the official
said.
But the United States
has failed to penetrate the group and has no idea when or where it will try to
strike, the officials acknowledged. Intelligence officials would not provide any
details of how they reached their conclusions about Mr. bin Laden's current
role, which have not previously been
reported.
Protective
Network
Many analysts are
convinced that he is being protected by a well-financed network of Pakistani
tribesmen and foreign militants who operate in the impoverished border region,
and that they have helped him communicate with major figures in his network.
"Bin Laden is getting his logistical support from the tribes," said one
intelligence official. "He still has operational communications with the
outside."
The place suspected
of being Mr. bin Laden's hide-out, in the shadow of the Hindu Kush mountain
range, is in one of the most isolated and backward corners of the world.
Pakistan's frontier is a barren terrain of mountains and mud. The fiercely
independent ethnic Pashtun who inhabit the region are farmers and smugglers,
most of them poor and illiterate. Local mullahs preach a radical Islamic
ideology that portrays the United States as bent on enslaving Muslims and
destroying their culture.
Sympathetic to the Taliban, many of whom attended madrasas, or religious
schools, in the region, militant young tribesmen perceive American soldiers as
dangerous aggressors who have occupied Afghanistan and Iraq and they view Mr.
bin Laden as an avenging hero. Pakistan prohibits Western reporters from
entering the area without a military
escort.
The seven
semiautonomous tribal areas in the region have been a virtual no man's land for
American forces since the Sept. 11 attacks, making them a natural haven for
Qaeda figures who fled Afghanistan after the battle of Tora Bora in
2001.
Pakistan does not permit
American military and intelligence forces in Afghanistan to cross the border to
go after militants. This prohibition on cross-border "hot pursuit" makes it
relatively easy for Taliban and Qaeda fighters to initiate attacks on American
bases in Afghanistan, and then quickly escape to the safety of Pakistan.
American soldiers have complained about being fired on from inside Pakistan by
foreign militants while Pakistani border guards sat and watched. Has Hot Pursuit
Cooled?
As a result of the
restrictions, American military and intelligence personnel in Afghanistan are no
longer really hunting for Mr. bin Laden, an intelligence official said. They are
trying to provide stability for Afghanistan's new government while battling a
local Taliban insurgency and a scattering of Qaeda fighters. On Saturday, the
United States military began an offensive in Afghanistan to pursue those
militants.
While the United
States conducts some air operations over Pakistan, they are tightly controlled.
Unmanned Predator drones are authorized to fly over Pakistani airspace, but only
with approval from the Pakistani military chain of command, frequently leading
to costly delays, C.I.A. officials
say.
Electronic surveillance of
the border region by the National Security Agency has proved frustrating as
well, American intelligence officials say. Mr. bin Laden is believed to avoid
using any electronic devices that could be monitored, and probably communicates
only through trusted couriers, American intelligence officials say. Without
cellphone towers along the frontier, satellite phones and push-to-talk radios
are widely used often by drug smugglers, making it difficult to zero in on Qaeda
operatives using the same kind of
equipment.
Hoping to collect
more intelligence, the C.I.A. opened secret bases with small numbers of
operatives in Pakistan in late 2003, but it has been unable to use them for
aggressive counterterrorism operations, intelligence officials say. The
operatives, many of whom are C.I.A. paramilitary officers, depended on Pakistani
Army commanders, whose views on cooperation with the C.I.A. vary widely,
American officials say.
"There
are real limits on our movement" inside Pakistan, said one American official,
and it has deeply frustrated intelligence officers. A C.I.A. spokesman declined
to discuss any aspect of the clandestine
bases.
Pakistani officials
said that the Americans were instantly identifiable and unlikely to succeed
working alone. They say the Americans are escorted to prevent them from being
kidnapped or killed, or their presence exposed, which would be damaging to the
Pakistani government.
The
decision to allow the bases is one of President Pervez Musharraf's most
significant steps to help the United States, intelligence officials say. He is
trying to balance his alliance with the United States with his need to avoid
setting off a broader insurgency in the border region, where the central
government is resented for its long neglect. Government officials said that some
militants from other parts of Pakistan have gone to the tribal areas to join the
fight.
Reluctant
Allies
Though the
Americans had pressed the Pakistanis to search for Qaeda forces since late 2001,
the military campaign was begun only after two assassination attempts against
General Musharraf in December 2003 were traced back to the tribal areas. Before
that, Pakistani officials had stated that there were no foreign militants in the
region.
The army eventually
deployed 25,000 troops in South Waziristan, one of the tribal areas, and found
several terrorist training camps. In October, Pakistani commanders said they had
killed 246 militants and captured 579. The raids and sweeps had a heavy cost.
About 200 Pakistani soldiers were killed, and tribal members said hundreds of
civilians had died.
On Sept.
9, for example, an air raid near the village of Dela in South Waziristan killed
as many as 80 civilians. Young men from the Mehsud tribe, many of whose members
died in the incident, began flocking to the militants. "That was a turning
point," said Rahimullan Yusufzai, a Pakistani journalist. "Their friends, their
relatives and people they knew were
killed."
No precise numbers
exist, but Pakistani officials estimated that 500 to 1,000 of the tribesmen were
fighting beside 150 to 300 foreign militants, most of them Uzbeks. Pakistani
analysts say the area's tribal structure is fraying. Drawn by the wealth, sense
of belonging and promise of paradise that the militants offer, unemployed young
tribesmen are openly defying edicts from tribal leaders and taking up arms, Mr.
Yusufzai said. "These young men refuse to listen to their elders, to their
families," he added.
Local
residents have said that they were caught between the army and the militants.
Nisar Wazir, 56, a teacher in Wana, a town in South Waziristan, said in a
telephone interview that the American and Pakistan governments had neglected the
tribal areas after supporting militants there in the 1980's anti-Soviet jihad.
Asked if Mr. bin Laden was hiding in the tribal areas, Mr. Wazir responded
angrily. "America brought Osama bin Laden to this region," he said. "They know
his whereabouts better than
me."
Despite the Pakistani
government's efforts to win over residents by building schools, wells and roads
there, cooperating with Pakistani and American investigators continues to be
considered "napak kam," or dirty work, among many tribesmen, Pakistani officials
say.
Aside from tribal
members, the militants may be getting help from some officers in Pakistan's
Inter-Services Intelligence, the country's powerful intelligence agency. The
agency was the hidden power behind the Taliban's rise to power in Afghanistan
and was close to Al Qaeda. Pakistani civilian security and police officials
complained in the past that intelligence agency personnel have sometimes
interfered with their efforts to arrest Qaeda
members.
Pakistani officials
warn that suspicion of the United States prevents a significant American
presence. Since the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, many Pakistanis fear that
the United States will bomb Iran to prevent it from developing nuclear weapons,
and that Pakistan will be
next.
One Pakistani security
official said opposition to American forces in the country would be widespread.
"The day the American troops cross into Pakistan territory, that will be the day
when the Pakistani government will be hard put to stop the people who say, 'Why
don't you reverse your position on helping America?' " said the official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity. "They already say, 'You have done too much to
help America.' "
Some American
intelligence officials say that the war in Iraq provided a powerful new
recruiting tool for Al Qaeda. The conflict has diverted resources - C.I.A.
paramilitary personnel and pilotless Predator surveillance aircraft - from
Afghanistan to Iraq in 2002, several current and former intelligence and
administration officials said. They contend the war in Iraq weakened the focus
of the United States, giving Al Qaeda time to regroup. Pakistan has been a
sanctuary for some Qaeda figures since soon after the American-led invasion of
Afghanistan. When the Taliban government fell in the winter of 2001, some Qaeda
leaders went west to Iran, but a large group of Qaeda members, including many of
Mr. bin Laden's lieutenants, went south to Pakistan, intelligence officials
say.
By spring 2002, South
Waziristan had become "the hub of Al Qaeda operations in the whole world," one
senior Pakistani official said. Local religious leaders offered the militants
houses, while poor tribesmen collected handsome rents on their
homes.
They soon established a
highly effective security system. A network of tribesmen augmented by radios and
satellite phones acted as lookouts and notified them whenever more than one
vehicle left a new Pakistani army base in Wana. "They could get warnings," said
a senior Pakistani official.
The foreign militants are flush with cash, use a highly sophisticated code when
communicating, travel in small groups at night, are disciplined and have access
to laptop computers, Pakistani military officials say. The network has even sent
e-mail messages, letters and DVD's to Pakistani soldiers fighting in the tribal
areas urging them not to kill their fellow Muslims on behalf of America,
according to Western
diplomats.
A Pre-Election
Warning
The C.I.A. has
intermittently received information about Mr. bin Laden's movements along the
Pakistani frontier, but it has always come too late to act against him,
officials said. "There is no credible information that he has ever left the
border region" since Tora Bora, one American analyst
said.
Many American analysts
have concluded that Ayman al-Zawahiri, the Egyptian who is Mr. bin Laden's chief
deputy, is also along Pakistan's border - in the tribal lands or an adjacent
region - but is no longer with Mr. bin Laden. American officials contend that
the two men separated for security reasons, but remain in close communication.
That may explain why over the last year or more they have each issued audio and
videotapes broadcast over Arab television, but have not been seen or heard
together.
Days before the
American presidential election this fall, Mr. bin Laden released a videotape
warning the United States to change course to prevent future attacks. In
contrast to his haggard appearance in his videotaped message televised in
September 2003, Mr. bin Laden appeared vigorous. C.I.A. officials say they are
not certain of the state of his health, but have long been dismissive of reports
that he suffered from kidney disease or some other serious
ailment.
Despite the
shortcomings of the Pakistani border campaign, the Bush administration contends
that General Musharraf has taken great personal and political risks to side with
the United States against Al Qaeda, and is unwilling to push him too hard or too
publicly. Out of deference to President Musharraf, the official United States
position on Mr. bin Laden's whereabouts is that he is on the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border, a description that avoids pointing fingers at
Islamabad.
American
counterterrorism officials cite the vital role Pakistani security services have
played in catching Qaeda operatives, including several important figures, in
Pakistan cities. In urban areas, security officials can argue that they are
doing police work, and can arrest Qaeda operatives one by one without much
political unrest. "The key high value targets that have been picked up in
Pakistan have been picked up in the cities," one American intelligence official
said. "We haven't gotten any out of the border." A benefit of the recent
campaign is that it has forced foreign Islamic fighters from lowlands of South
Waziristan into mountains and forests, other tribal areas or Pakistani cities,
American and Pakistani intelligence officials say. "It caused movement, and
hopefully that will expose them and we can target them," an American
said.
A 'Success'
Meets Skepticism
At the
end of November, the Pakistani government called the South Waziristan operation
a success, saying that Mr. bin Laden was not there. Meeting with President Bush
in Washington recently, General Musharraf declared that Pakistani forces had
"broken the back" of the Qaeda network in his country and destroyed its training
bases.
Many American
intelligence officials have been skeptical of the effort, though, noting that
the Pakistanis often alerted tribal leaders to raids beforehand and mostly only
snared foot soldiers. To rout Al Qaeda and find Mr. bin Laden is going to
require a much more sustained campaign by the United States and Pakistan,
intelligence officials from those countries say. The United States is spending
$4.5 million to help build roads, wells and schools in the tribal areas, an
amount dwarfed by the $18 billion the United States is spending on the
reconstruction of Iraq. Pakistani officials and others say economic development,
locally elected government and full integration of the tribal areas into
Pakistan are the only way to eradicate militancy from the isolated
area.
"To really neutralize and
eliminate them, it will have to be a lot more effort," said Talat Masood, an
Islamabad political analyst and former general. "They are still a very potent
force."
Posted: Monday - December 13, 2004 at 08:35 PM
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